Tuesday, April 22, 2008

iPhone moves a step closer to getting IM


A recent patent filing indicates that Apple is getting closer to adding its own instant messaging client to the iPhone.
he filing is titled "Portable Electronic Device for Instant Messaging," and covers methods for sending, receiving, and viewing ongoing conversations. The proposed GUI is similar to Apple's current interface for SMS.

Built-in support for IM has been missing from the iPhone, to the dismay of many users. The patent filing shows Apple has IM on its mind.

At the recent launch of the iPhone SDK, AOL demonstrated an AOL Instant Messenger client, but it isn't allowed to run in the background, which normal IM applications rely on.

Support for IM is quickly becoming a must on mobile phones. Users want the same thing on their mobile phone as they have on their computers including IM, according to Leif-Olof Wallin, research vice president at Gartner.

"It will be a blockbuster in two, three years," said Wallin.

But instant messaging is also a threat to the massive amounts mobile carriers make from SMS messaging, which the iPhone currently supports.

"They can charge much more for SMS compared to IM," said Wallin.

Pressure from its carrier partners is a possible explanation for why Apple has taken a hands-off approach to a feature many users want, according to Wallin.

"At the same time it can't afford to be left behind" he said.

Asustek to Share Eee PC at Taiwan Open Source Summit


Asustek Computer plans to share its experience with open-source software in its popular Eee PC low-cost laptop at the OpenTechSummit Taiwan 2008, which runs from April 25 to 29, the company said.

The Taiwanese PC vendor is the largest corporate sponsor of the event and is currently selling the most popular laptop that carries an open source OS, the Eee PC.

The company officially started selling the Eee PC last October in Taiwan, offering four different configurations from NT$7,000 (US$231) for the 2G-byte "Surf." They all run a Linux OS from Xandros of New York.

So far, Asustek said it has sold a million of the low-cost laptops, but it declined to break down the number of Linux versions sold versus the number of Eee PCs sold with Microsoft Windows XP.

The Linux OS has allowed the company to keep prices down on the laptops in two ways. First, open-source software comes at little or no cost, and second because the streamlined OS requires a bare minimum of hardware to run. It's been the same story as for the One Laptop Per Child Foundation (OLPC), which also uses a Linux OS in its XO laptop.

The foundation has been working with Microsoft to develop a streamlined version of XP that can be used in the XO with lower hardware requirements than full XP.

Microsoft earlier this month published new guidelines for designing ultra low-cost laptops for Windows XP.

Asustek launched its first Eee PC with Windows XP earlier this year, and said the OS had a big impact on sales. The company has forecast that two-thirds of the 5 million Eee PCs it expects to sell this year will run Windows XP, while the remainder will run a Linux OS.

Sales of the Eee PC have been strongest so far in Europe, where around 40 percent of all of the low-cost laptops have been shipped. The company expects that figure to rise to 50 percent later this year.

NetNewsWire RSS reader beta updated

Popular RSS reader NetNewsWire has been updated fixing a couple of bugs with the application.

According to the developer, two main issues have been fixed in NetNewsWire 3.1.6b1. First, the update fixes a memory leak affecting some users and the new version makes loading clippings at startup slightly faster.

NetNewsWire is compatible with RSS and Atom feeds, allowing users to keep up-to-date with new posting from around the Internet. The application features tabbed browsing, searching and the ability to download podcasts and other enclosures.

NetNewsWire 3.1.6b1 can be downloded from the developer's website.

Nokia signs Sony BMG for free music offering


Nokia will offer free 12-month access to music from artists of Sony BMG, the world's second-biggest label, to buyers of its particular music phones, the world's top cellphone maker said on Tuesday.
ast December, Nokia unveiled a similar deal for its "Comes With Music" phones with the top record label Universal.

"Comes With Music is expected to launch in the second half of 2008 on a range of Nokia devices in selected markets," Nokia said in a statement.

Nokia gave no financial details.

Sony BMG, home to artists including Beyonce, Bruce Springsteen and Celine Dion, is jointly owned by Sony Corp and German media group Bertelsmann AG.

The new music offering from Nokia -- the first cellphone maker to push heavily into content -- would differ from any other package on the market as users can keep all the music they have downloaded during the 12 months.

Such unlimited download models could offer a shot in the arm to the music industry, which is struggling to find ways to make up for falling CD sales.

Nokia said it expects all top labels to sign up for "Comes With Music" offering.

"We are quite confident that we will have all the labels at the table for Comes With Music. We are progressing in those negotiations," said Liz Schimel, head of Nokia's music business.

Sony BMG joins Universal in offering catalog on Nokia phones

Sony BMG is joining Universal Music Group in allowing users of select Nokia mobile phones access to its entire music catalog later this year.

Nokia Corp.'s "Comes With Music" program will allow users who buy select cell phone models to download any song from Sony BMG's catalog onto their phone or their computers during the first 12 months of owning such a device. Nokia announced a partnership with Universal last fall, and now has brought Sony BMG aboard.

"When you give consumers the key to the candy store without any limitations, there's a lot more opportunity for discovering music that you might not have found before," Thomas Hesse, president of global digital business and U.S. sales for Sony BMG Music Entertainment, told The Associated Press on Monday. "We think this will energize the discovery of music."

Nokia said the phones should be available in the U.S. by the second half of this year. While fans would be able to download an unlimited number of songs by way of their phone or on their computer from hundreds of thousands of tracks, they would not be able to burn the music to a CD or use it with iTunes, Hesse said. However, after the year is over, the music fan can keep the music.

"It's not like some other subscription services where you lose everything," said Tero Ojanpera, Nokia's executive vice president, entertainment and communities. "Here you can keep everything. This is like really getting access to a store where you can really now explore freely."

Ojanpera didn't disclose the price range for the phones, but said they would vary according to the model.

"PS3 Virtual Universe will Be Late": Says SONY


Sony's game unit said Tuesday it was delaying for the second time the launch of an online virtual universe for the PlayStation 3 because the service needs further development.

"Home" had originally been scheduled for launch in late 2007 but was delayed until early 2008. Now Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. plans to open up an early version of the virtual universe in the second half of 2008.

"We understand that we are asking PS3 and prospective PS3 users to wait a bit longer, but we have come to the conclusion that we need more time to refine the service to ensure a more focused gaming entertainment experience than what it is today," said the head of Sony's game unit, Kazuo Hirai.

The delay is another setback to Sony, which has much riding on the PS3 but faces fierce competition from Microsoft's XBox 360 and Nintendo's Wii.

Sony has said previously that the free service would allow PS3 users to set up an apartment for life-like virtual characters, or avatars, who can invite friends over, share pictures and videos, and play online games.

Users can personalise their virtual home with furniture, art and other items and chat through audio or video links.

The service is seen as a cross between social community website MySpace and Linden Lab's Second Life, which allows "residents" to build homes, create vehicles, nightclubs and stores, and to communicate with instant messaging.

The Los Angeles Times reported on Monday that Sony was preparing to launch a separate online video service for the PS3 as soon as the US summer, quoting unnamed studio executives familiar with the plan.

Clinton, Obama battle at The Last Big State Contest as Pennsylvania votes


Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama collided Tuesday in the Pennsylvania primary, the last of the big-state contests in a Democratic presidential campaign growing more negative the longer it goes.

With 158 delegates at stake, Pennsylvania offered the largest prize remaining in a primary season that ends on June 3.

Obama began the night with a delegate lead, 1648.5-1509.5, out of 2,025 needed to win the nomination.

Both rivals sought to shape expectations in advance. Obama said he expected to lose, but narrowly, and worked to limit any gains Clinton made in the delegate chase.

"We think we've made enormous progress" though "it's an uphill battle," Obama said as he greeted patrons at a Pittsburgh diner Tuesday. He noted that polls show a tighter race than just a few weeks ago, but said: "We still, I think, have to consider ourselves the underdog."

"We've got a great organization. A lot of it's going to depended on turnout," Obama added.

For her part, Clinton dismissed the notion that she needed a blowout victory to quell doubts about her candidacy.

"I think a win is a win. Maybe I'm old fashioned about that," she told reporters. "I think maybe the question ought to be, why can't he close the deal with his extraordinary financial advantage? Why can't he win a state like this one if that's the way it turns out ... big states, states that Democrats have to win."

The former first lady greeted voters at a polling place in Conshohocken, in suburban Philadelphia. She also visited a local restaurant there and picked up a Philly cheese steak.

Clinton's aides disputed suggestions she would prevail by a double-digit margin.

Beyond that, a defeat for Clinton could spell the end of her candidacy. But a sizable win would strengthen her claim to being the stronger general election opponent, an argument she has made to superdelegates who hold the balance of power at the party convention in Denver in August.

Whatever the outcome, the six-week run-up to the primary was notable for close-to-the-ground campaigning normally reserved for the early-voting states of Iowa and New Hampshire, and for the decidedly negative tone of its final few days.

Philly cheesesteaks were commonplace. Obama went bowling as he reached out for the support of working-class voters, and Clinton showed her blue-collar bona fides with a shot of Crown Royal and a beer chaser.

Flush with cash, Obama reported spending $11.2 million on television in the state, compared with $4.8 for Clinton.

The tone of the campaign was increasingly personal.

"In the last 10 years Barack Obama has taken almost $2 million from lobbyists, corporations and PACs. The head of his New Hampshire campaign is a drug company lobbyist, in Indiana an energy lobbyist, a casino lobbyist in Nevada," said a Clinton commercial that aired in the final days of the race.

Obama responded with an ad that accused Clinton of "eleventh-hour smears paid for by lobbyist money." It said that unlike his rival, he "doesn't take money from special interest PACs or Washington lobbyists — not one dime."

To the delight of Republicans, the six-week layoff between primaries produced a string of troubles for the Democrats.

Obama was forced onto the defensive by incendiary comments by his pastor, Rev. Jeremiah Wright, then triggered controversy on his own by saying small-town Americans cling to their guns and religion because of their economic hardships.

Clinton conceded that she had not landed under sniper fire in Bosnia while first lady, even though she said several times that she had. And she replaced her chief strategist, Mark Penn, after he met with officials of the Colombian government seeking passage of a free trade agreement that she opposes.

McCain, the Republican nomination already his, rose in the polls as he prepared for the fall campaign.

The remaining Democratic contests are primaries in North Carolina, Indiana, Oregon, Kentucky, West Virginia, Montana, South Dakota and Puerto Rico, and caucuses in Guam.

Bill Clinton `Firing Up' Rural Voters For Hillary



Hillary Clinton criticizes Saudi oil wealth while her husband benefits from its largess. She opposes a Colombian trade agreement that he supports. And she condemns China while his foundation solicits donations there.

With a record like that, former President Bill Clinton could well be running against his wife instead of stumping for her. The couple's differences, and his frequent blowups on the campaign trail, though, haven't hurt much with her supporters. As the campaign heads into the Pennsylvania primary today, he still manages to excite voters in rural areas and small towns where she has her best chance for victory over Barack Obama.

``I don't think he's an issue, especially in Pennsylvania, where he's always been well-loved,'' said Clay Richards, assistant director of Quinnipiac University's Polling Institute in Hamden, Connecticut. ``He's firing up the Clinton base and making sure they stay motivated.''

Clinton's stumbles on the campaign trail have sometimes put the focus more on him than her and cut into his popularity.

He angered blacks after Obama's South Carolina victory in January by noting Jesse Jackson had won there, too. He lost his temper in front of California Democrats when asked about former ally Bill Richardson's endorsement of Obama, 46, the San Francisco Chronicle reported. And he defended his wife for claiming she came under fire in Bosnia by falsely asserting she said it once ``late at night when she was exhausted.''

`The Race Card'

Clinton yesterday accused the Obama campaign of playing ``the race card on me'' after the South Carolina primary, a charge that drew a rebuke from Obama. Clinton told a Philadelphia radio station his comments were ``twisted'' after he likened Obama's primary victory to Jackson's.

Clinton was asked if he regretted that comparison, after a Pennsylvania official said she felt he was marginalizing Obama as ``the black candidate.''

``No, I think that they played the race card on me,'' he said. ``We now know from memos from the campaign and everything that they planned to do it all along.''

Obama scoffed at Clinton's remarks.

``Hold on a second, so former President Clinton dismissed my victory in South Carolina as being similar to Jesse Jackson and he's suggesting that somehow I had something to do with it?'' he said to reporters today at a Pittsburgh diner. ``Ok, well you better ask him what he meant by that.'' He denied there was any plan to use the comments for political purposes.

`Can't They Disagree?'

Clinton's appearance in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh yesterday, where he attended rallies, was a departure for the 61-year-old former president. He spends most of his time campaigning in smaller communities, where the policy differences and verbal gaffes don't appear to have resonated.

``Can't they disagree? My husband disagrees with me,'' said Janice Onofrey, 58, who owns a gift shop in Ford City, Pennsylvania. ``He's wonderful. He's charismatic.''

Bob Dull, 60, a retired school guidance counselor, was in Clarion, Pennsylvania, to see Clinton speak on April 16. ``A president, here in Clarion,'' he said. ``It's a big deal.''

Clinton has visited dozens of towns and small cities in Pennsylvania, including Cranberry Township and New Castle, with populations of fewer than 30,000. He campaigns in high school gyms before audiences of just a few hundred people.

At every stop, he saturates local media and fuels chatter, as he did in California and Texas, where his wife won primaries.

``Don't you let anyone tell you she can't win,'' he told a crowd in a high school gym in Kittanning, Pennsylvania.

`First Known Visit'

The campaign is also applying that strategy to Indiana and North Carolina, which will hold primaries May 6. Clinton this month toured Seymour, Indiana, population about 20,000, and Bedford, 14,000. On April 4, he greeted 1,800 people on the campus of St. Andrews Presbyterian College in Laurinburg, North Carolina. A college press release hailed the stop as the ``first known visit of a former president to Scotland County.''

``He's an asset in any rural area because he will draw 10 percent of the population,'' said Hillary Clinton strategist Ace Smith.

Still, the campaign has taken a toll on his public standing. Before the nominating battle began, Bill Clinton assured intimates he could deliver a decent share of the black vote for his wife, a New York senator.

It hasn't turned out that way. As Clinton barnstormed South Carolina in January, his scolding tone sparked acrimony. Obama, an Illinois senator, won 85 percent of the black vote.

A March NBC/Wall Street Journal poll showed voters viewed him negatively by a margin of 45 percent to 42 percent; that compared with a 48 percent to 35 percent favorable rating a year earlier.

Mixed Picture

Last week's Bloomberg News/Los Angeles Times survey of Democratic voters in Pennsylvania, Indiana and North Carolina suggests a mixed picture. Overall, Democrats in those states consider him more of an asset than a liability, though he gets negative ratings from self-described independent Democrats, who may be the swing voters in those contests.

Those misgivings have grown as the former president's business dealings have become a campaign issue.

Since leaving office, he has earned at least $800,000 in speaking fees supporting a Colombia trade agreement that his wife opposes, the Huffington Post reported.

Candidate Clinton criticizes oil interests and tells voters ``you will not see me holding hands with the Saudis.'' Her campaign confirmed that Saudi donors have given money toward her husband's presidential library.

Boycott Ceremony

Senator Clinton has urged President George W. Bush to boycott the Olympic opening ceremonies in Beijing. The Los Angeles Times reported Bill Clinton's foundation accepted a donation from Chinese Internet company Alibaba Inc., which is accused of aiding the government in tracking Tibetan activists.

Hillary Clinton, 60, shrugs off questions about how her husband might influence her administration, saying she has ``a different attitude toward trade.''

Clinton is likely to boost turnout for his wife, said Eric Plutzer, academic director at the Penn State Survey Research Center.

``People are thinking of his time in office,'' Plutzer said. ``People don't begrudge ex-presidents the opportunity to parlay that into income.''

Obama explains comment about McCain


Barack Obama, who said Republican John McCain would be an improvement over President Bush, argued Tuesday that his comment didn't undercut Democrats' contention that the GOP nominee-in-waiting offers the same as the unpopular president.
To say that John McCain and some of his instincts may be better than George Bush's, that's a low bar," the Democratic presidential candidate said, adding that he also has stressed that McCain is offering "warmed over versions of Bush foreign policy and economic policy."

"So, there's no contradiction there," Obama said.

In Reading, Pa. on Sunday, the Illinois senator was trying to argue that he is the better choice over Democratic rival Hillary Rodham Clinton in Tuesday's primary in Pennsylvania. But Obama, who often claims that McCain would be an extension of Bush's tenure, ended up inadvertently praising McCain.

"You have a real choice in this election. Either Democrat would be better than John McCain. And all three of us would be better than George Bush," Obama said.

That comment contrasted with what the Democratic Party as a whole often says about McCain as it tries to make the general election a referendum on Bush — that the likely Republican nominee offers a vision identical to that of the president on everything from Iraq to the economy.

It also gave Clinton an opening to criticize Obama, saying: "We need a nominee who will take on John McCain, not cheer on John McCain."

Asked Tuesday about his praise of McCain, Obama tried to turn the tables on Clinton.

"I think Senator Clinton's suggesting that she and John McCain are the two people who are qualified to be commander in chief is probably something that could end up coming back to haunt us in November," Obama told reporters.

Last month, Clinton told retired military leaders that presidential candidates must "be able to demonstrate we can cross the commander in chief threshold ... I believe that I've done that. Certainly, Senator McCain has done that and you'll have to ask Senator Obama with respect to his candidacy."

Monday, April 7, 2008

Apple's iTunes Store Becomes No. 1 in Music Sales


With new online music retailers springing up to challenge its Net dominance, Apple's iTunes Store moved the goalposts again Thursday. It announced its store has overtaken even Wal-Mart as the number-one music retailer in the U.S. -- online or off.

The new designation is based on data during January and February from the NPD Group, a market-research firm. NPD's MusicWatch survey compiles unit purchases in a given week.

Physical CD Sales Drop

According to news reports, Apple now has 19 percent of the market and Wal-Mart, including both its online and brick-and-mortar sales, has 15 percent. Best Buy took third with 13 percent, and Amazon, which has launched a music store to compete with Apple, is fourth at six percent. Target, also with six percent, is fifth, followed by FYE/Coconuts, Borders, Barnes & Noble, Circuit City, and Rhapsody.

Apple's move to the top of both the real and virtual worlds of music retailing is a milestone not only for the Cupertino, Calif.-based company, but also for the industry. Physical CD sales have been plummeting as the industry tries to adjust to the new digital reality. In fact, NPD reports that nearly half of all teens in the U.S. didn't buy even one physical CD in 2007, up from 38 percent in 2006.

But it's not just the real-vs-virtual ratio that is radically changing the music industry. There was a 10 percent decline in overall music spending in 2007.

Michael Gartenberg, an analyst with industry research firm JupiterResearch, said the new position for the iTunes Store "demonstrates the remarkable shift that has taken place in the music industry." He noted that this shift not only means an increasing role for online distribution, but the "reinvention of the single."

Four Billion Songs

The new claim to fame for Apple's store comes as it faces new competition. Apple said its iTunes Store, which launched less than five years ago, has sold more than four billion songs, has 50 million customers, and has "the world's largest music catalog" with more than six million songs.

One potential new competitor launched Thursday as social-networking site MySpace joined with three of the four biggest music companies, Sony BMG, Universal Music Group and Warner Music, to create what MySpace described as a "fully integrated 360-degree global music solution."

In addition to music sales, there will socializing tools, ad-supported audio and video streaming, a mobile storefront, concert tickets, artist T-shirts, and integration with MySpace's millions of artist profile and user pages.

And recently Earth's biggest store -- Amazon -- got bigger, as it launched Amazon MP3, with music downloads free of digital-rights management and more than two million songs. Those downloads are generally priced lower than songs from the iTunes Store.

Comming Up: Anti-Theft Technology For Laptops From Intel


Intel plans to release an anti-theft technology for laptops during the fourth quarter of this year, but the company isn't offering many details yet.

Called Intel Anti-Theft Technology, the new capability will be added to Intel's Active Management Technology, which is part of Centrino vPro and allows IT managers to remotely access and configure computers.

In the event of theft, the technology will "basically lock the system, lock the disk, so people cannot be maliciously using and getting the data," said Dadi Perlmutter, executive vice president and general manager of Intel's Mobility Group, according to a transcript of his presentation at the Intel Developer Forum (IDF) in Shanghai.

The technology, which appears to render both the processor and storage inaccessible, aims to ease concerns over valuable corporate or personal data falling into the wrong hands when laptops are lost or stolen, according to Perlmutter.

The problem of lost data on stolen and missing laptops is a long-standing problem and a growing concern, particular for its impact on personal data.

In December 2006, Boeing reported the theft of a laptop that contained Social Security numbers, names and home addresses of 382,000 current and former employees. The laptop was stolen from an employee's car, the company said. The incident was particularly noteworthy because it pushed the number of U.S. data breach victims past the 100 million mark -- nearly one-third of the population at that time.

Since then, there have been many other incidents of stolen laptops carrying sensitive data, such as the December 2007 theft of a laptop containing sensitive information on 268,000 Minnesota-region blood donors.

The anti-theft technology being developed by Intel would presumably give IT managers a way of protecting this data once a machine has gone missing.

Besides Intel, several other companies are working on the anti-theft technology, including Lenovo Group, McAfee, Fujitsu Siemens Computers and Phoenix Technologies.

More details of the technology will be made available when it is closer to being released, Intel said.

Yahoo Wants Appraisal On Current Offer From Microsoft


Yahoo is not opposed to a deal with Microsoft but Microsoft should pay more than $31 a share if it wants to buy the company, Yahoo plans to say in a letter to Microsoft, a person familiar with the matter said on Sunday.
n the letter to be sent on Monday, Yahoo is also expected to reject Microsoft's suggestion that its business is deteriorating, the person said.

Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer in a letter to Yahoo's board on Saturday threatened to lower his company's bid and mount a proxy campaign if the Internet company does not agree to a deal in the next three weeks.

Nintendo Wii outsells PS3 3-to-1 in Japan in March

Nintendo Co Ltd's (7974.OS) Wii game console outsold Sony Corp's (6758.T) PlayStation 3 by 3-to-1 in Japan in March but its DS handheld machine fell behind the PlayStation Portable for the first time in six months, a game magazine publisher said.
Nintendo, creator of such game characters as Mario and Zelda, sold 265,542 units of the Wii in the five weeks to March 30, compared with 81,579 units of the PS3, Enterbrain said on Friday.

The Wii features an innovative motion-sensing controller that allows gamers direct on-screen play by swinging it like a racket or sword, while offering a range of games that has widened the machine's appeal to women and the elderly.

Sony sold 415,415 units of its PlayStation Portable (PSP) during the month. That beat DS sales of 255,124 units, as Capcom Co Ltd's (9697.T) hunting action game, "Monster Hunter Freedom 2G," designed for the PSP, became the top seller in March, Enterbrain said.

Sales of Microsoft Corp's (MSFT.O) Xbox 360, which is popular in the United States but is struggling in the home turf of Sony and Nintendo, came to 13,127 units, according to Enterbrain.

Prior to the announcement, shares in Nintendo closed up 1.1 percent at 54,400 yen while Sony fell 2.1 percent to 4,260 yen. The benchmark Nikkei average (.N225) lost 0.7 percent.

Crisis Core: Final Fantasy VII, A Must Add to Final Fantasy

The title Final Fantasy has become synonymous with gaming, and arguably the game that resonated strongest with its fans is 1997's Final Fantasy VII.

Over ten years later, the tale first told on the original PlayStation returns to the forefront on the PlayStation Portable in Crisis Core: Final Fantasy VII, an elaborate adventure with a dynamic story and engaging combat system.

Crisis Core serves as a prologue to Final Fantasy VII. You play the role of Zack, an elite SOLDIER with the Shinra Company. The story begins with Zack and mentor Angeal investigating the disappearance of a fellow SOLDIER and his squad.

As with most Final Fantasy chapters, story is core to the experience. Writers effectively capture the camaraderie between characters, particularly Zack and Cloud, protagonist. Players also get a glimpse at other key figures, including Aerith and Sephiroth.

The presentation sets an epic tone. The computer-generated cut scenes are astonishing, even on the PSP's small screen. Musical transitions between calm and combat are handled nicely, often flipping from a soothing tune to a vicious riff of heavy guitars. One drawback is the inability to skip cut scenes if you must replay a level.

Combat and exploration work well on the portable. You wander through towns and other landscapes, talking with characters and gathering information. An e-mail system lets you correspond with characters you meet in your journey.

Unlike most RPGs, which utilize turn-based battles, combat occurs in real time. The bottom of the screen is where you'll find your health, magic and attack meters. To the lower right is a row or orbs representing abilities.

The orbs range from a simple sword attack, to magic spells, Materia or the ability to access items. You'll use the left and right shoulder buttons to toggle between each. It's tricky at first, especially when grabbing items.

Inventory menus are slick and easy to navigate. You can customize Zack's equipment, buy items from shops, and fuse different Materia into new spells.

Special moves are handled through a Digital Mind Wave, a slot-reel mechanic that channels past experiences with other characters into a powerful attack. At random points during combat, the DMW spins. One set of panels shows characters and another numbers. Matching three faces sets up your attacks, while the numbers determine Zack's ability to level up. It's an intriguing approach, but you lose control of how your character grows.

If you need a break from the lengthy campaign, Crisis Core offers dozens of side missions, most of which focus on clearing an area of enemies. They're short and sweet, providing quick diversions.

Fans of Final Fantasy will find the additional backstory in Crisis Core riveting, and should consider their collection incomplete without it.

A new day for Macs in the enterprise?

When Apple CEO Steve Jobs announced that the iPhone was ready for enterprise use, the announcement caused a stir that few of the world's iconic businessmen could match. It seemed that everyone from rank-and-file worker-bees to CEOs wanted to get their corporate applications served up on the hot new device. Why? This was Apple -- a synonym for awe-inspiring design and coolness, the antithesis to stodgy old corporate technology that burns the eyes red and freezes computers blue.

But some Apple-watchers and evangelist IT practitioners who use Macs for business think the announcement runs deeper than the iPhone itself in its importance. Some believe it could usher in the era of a more enterprise-friendly Apple.

Such a paradigm shift, they argue, could serve as the final ingredient in the boiling cauldron being stirred by employees at the edge of organizations who have become dissatisfied with corporate technology and who have turned to innovative options in the consumer space to meet their needs.

Some tall hurdles related to converting an enterprise from PCs to Macs, of course, have been around for years. Many corporate IT departments find themselves beholden to decisions made by predecessors during the 1990s, when PCs and the Microsoft Windows operating system seized a chokehold on the corporate market. Companies planned everything from back-end servers to client software based on a Microsoft framework, notes Roger Kay, an analyst with EndPoint Technologies.

Integrating Mac equipment and other Apple products into such an environment requires time and money. "Despite the hairiness of Microsoft software, most companies crave compatibility with it," Kay says. "They have these existing investments that they want to get use of."

But a move to Web-based software, where users need nothing but a browser to access their applications, could alleviate the IT hang-up on integration.

Employees have been leading this movement. Instead of using the corporate-sanctioned software on their workstations, many have gravitated to technologies like wikis, blogs, and social networks to collaborate on projects horizontally, without IT's help or blessing. In the CIO Consumer Technology survey , the 311 IT decision makers surveyed conceded that nearly 25 percent of their employees use social networks for work purposes, while 21 percent utilize wikis and another 17 percent use blogs.

From a hardware perspective, Macs have increasingly become more people's brand of choice. Apple shipped 2.3 million Macs in the first quarter of 2008, which represented a 44 percent unit growth for the product and helped Apple realize 47 percent revenue growth compared to the same quarter the year before.

But businesses' adoption of Macs and Apple software has still been sluggish, perhaps, in part, due to this being a low priority for Apple.

While Apple of course deals with businesses, and has a business team at some of its stores, it undoubtedly remains a consumer-oriented company, by the numbers. Its iPod claims around 70 percent of the market share for MP3 players. Apple sold 22.1 million iPods in the first quarter of 2008. On average, the company says, an iPod has been sold every 1.7 seconds in the five-and-half-year life span of the product.

And evangelists who run Mac shops in SMBs say their experiences, not as dissimilar to those of large enterprises as you might believe, still demonstrate a mixed bag of results for those using Apple in the corporate setting.

The wholesale switch
Shani Magosky, chief operating officer (with IT responsibilities) of Jaffe Associates, a 25-person marketing and public relations firm, didn't need the iPhone to embrace Apple.

Magosky started looking into Macs for her traditionally PC and Windows-based company back in the fall of 2006, she says. She wasn't necessarily wooed by Bono singing in an iPod commercial. She was sick of PCs breaking all the time, she says. Then there was the "sticker shock" of learning what it would cost her to upgrade to Microsoft's SharePoint collaboration software (and the accompanying server technology).

Specifically, she'd been running an outdated version of Microsoft's terminal server, which allowed her employees (all of whom work remotely, as Jaffe has no central office) to connect to the network and share files. "It was unnecessarily slow and unreliable," she says. "We ended up spending a fortune on IT trouble-shooting."

With her terminal server being outdated, she was told the best option would be to upgrade to SharePoint, which, after purchasing and installing the server, buying the software licenses and all the support surrounding it, would have cost $100,000, Magosky says. "They nickel and dime you," she says.

Meanwhile, PCs became a costly problem. Between what Magosky views as poor manufacturing and tons of malware permeating the layer Windows leaves between the Web and the network, the PCs began to break with great frequency, she says. "There is just so much that can go wrong with them. All these viruses happen to PCs that don't happen to Macs. And then it costs you more to fix it than just buying a new one. So I said I wasn't going to waste anymore, and went out and bought a MacBook Pro."

Perhaps serendipitously, right around this time, her boss, President and CEO Jay Jaffe, was on vacation with his daughter in San Francisco and visited Apple's flagship store on Stockton Street. "He bought an iPod touch that he was infatuated with," says Magosky. "When he was there, he talked to the business team. They convinced him there was nothing we needed to do now that we couldn't do with them [Apple]."

Before long, Magosky set about switching her entire shop over to Macs. Since Jaffe Associates serves the legal industry, which makes wide use of Microsoft software, Jaffe began using Office 2008 for Macs. The company also chose Apple's Kerio software for e-mail, Entourage for archiving, and Apple's Xserve server for back-end storage of data. Magosky predicts that Jaffe will realize a savings of 50 percent in maintenance costs due to the Apple switch, which will pay for the hardware and implementation of Apple products in the first year, she says.

Third-party Mac support, by the hour, remains more costly than Windows support. But, Magosky says, her total amount of required support time has dropped so substantially that she's gaining that 50 percent in savings.

"It's going to increase the efficiency of our staff tremendously," she says. "On top of the hard dollar savings, it's going to free me up to do other, more value-added things." What about those cool iPhones? While Jaffe's users primarily use RIM BlackBerry devices for mobile needs, Magosky says that she might consider iPhones down the road, if enough users call for them.

Hurdles remain
Ditching PCs at a 25-person company is one thing. But introducing Apple to a large enterprise with legacy systems is quite another. Even some enterprises who've been managing mixed Mac and PC environments for years say that Apple still has some work to do.

Rob Israel, manager of desktop support at Digitas, a New York-based ad agency, says that 30 percent of his company runs Macs. Israel, who manages some 600 Macs across the enterprise, says that a hybrid environment of Macs and Windows can have its pitfalls, technologically and culturally.

"We barely deploy Apple servers here even though the culture has become Macintosh friendly," he says. "There is still a sense in the IT department that we are a Windows shop, and why bother complicating things by introducing more platforms."

The IT shop runs four Apple Xserves, one of which is used to host Filemaker Pro.

While Israel describes the company's relationship with Apple in terms of contracts as "great," the arrangement leaves some things to be desired, he says. "Apple does not provide technology roadmaps, which enterprise IT departments obviously need," he says. "What's worse, they make their hardware incompatible with the previous version of the operating system, and their schedule is impossible to keep up with."

For instance, Israel says Digitas can't deploy new versions of Leopard, Mac's operating system, as quickly as Apple demands. Every time Apple moves to the next version of an OS, Israel says, Digitas ends up having six months where they're forced to buy out-of-date equipment to stay compatible with the old OS. "We have complained about this for the last four years," he explains. "They [Apple] do not have any motivation to design their new hardware to support an old OS, so they won't."

Not quite a tipping point
Apple's buzz could hardly be louder. But have we now reached a time when many large enterprises can consider doing a rip and replace, swapping PCs for Macs? Not likely, says Kay.

Even if a progressive CIO who felt his or her company had sunk too much money into Windows wanted to switch wholesale, gaining the initial capital to get the job done, especially as the economy tightens, could be difficult, he says. "It's hard to see a time when you can change the paradigm that much for computing," Kay says.

For now, the iPhone might just be the starting point where businesses dip their toes in the Apple pool to see if the enterprise experience improves.

At New York Media (publishers of New York magazine and NYMag.com), Albert C. Lee, director of IT, says he has used Macs for some employees in the organization but has run into problems with service-level agreements. But that's not going to stop him from potentially adding iPhones to the enterprise when it the capability to access e-mail from a Microsoft Exchange server becomes possible in June.

"A good majority of our enterprise users already have an iPhone for a personal communications device," he says. "The idea of empowering a large population of your corporate users with enterprise push e-mail and remote calendar management, especially when they had none before, is pretty attractive."

Video game firm THQ sees buying opportunities

THQ Inc (THQI.O) is looking at buying other video game developers, but the publisher of games like "Cars" and "Saints Row" can grow without making acquisitions, Chief Executive Brian Farrell said on Thursday.

"We are seeing some opportunities in the marketplace given the two transactions going on," Farrell told Reuters in an interview at a company event to preview upcoming games.

He was referring to the pending merger between Activision Inc (ATVI.O) and the games unit of Vivendi (VIV.PA), and Electronic Arts Inc's (ERTS.O) $2 billion offer for Take-Two Interactive Software Inc (TTWO.O).

"It's going to create some opportunities because we are actively looking at every developer, every license out there and with our size now we can be more aggressive than larger, slower firms," Farrell said.

THQ has already moved this year to bolster its product lineup. Earlier this week, it said had bought Elephant Entertainment, a maker of casual and online games, for an undisclosed amount.

In January, THQ bought Big Huge Games, a studio focused on strategy games such as "Rise of Nations." Farrell said that team is focused on making a new role-playing game to fill a gap in THQ's product lineup.

Asked if THQ was looking at buying smaller development studios or publicly listed firms, Farrell said: "M&A is not a required or necessary thing in order to grow."

Analysts have said the recent merger activity in the video game industry is partly a result of development budgets for new games soaring into the tens of millions of dollars, putting pressure on smaller firms with limited financial resources.

Farrell said the video game industry was still growing fast despite concerns that a broad U.S. economic slowdown could hit consumer spending.

"We haven't seen any signs of slowdown," Farrell said. He said strong year-end holiday sales of new gaming hardware like Nintendo Co Ltd's (7974.OS) Wii console, Microsoft Corp's (MSFT.O) Xbox 360 and Sony Corp's (6758.T) PlayStation 3.

This year, THQ is banking on new games like criminal action title "Saints Row 2" and "WallE" based on the upcoming Disney/Pixar movie to drive growth after a disappointing 2007 forced it to kill off lackluster franchises like "Stuntman."

He declined to comment on specific financial forecasts, saying THQ would give an updated outlook when it reported results for its fiscal fourth quarter ended in March. The company previously said it expected a net loss of 13 cents per share on sales of $200 million.

THQ shares have risen 23 percent over the past month but its stock is still down 35 percent from a year ago.


Panasonic has become the first cell-phone manufacturer to ship 100 million units in the Japanese market, it said Thursday.

The company first entered the market in 1979 when it launched its TZ-801 analog handset for the new car phone service of NTT Public Corp., the government-owned forerunner to the privatized NTT.

It followed this six years later with the TZ-802A in 1985. The handset was a shoulder phone, so called because it could detached from a car holder and carried around over the user's shoulder. It weight about 7 kilograms, which is about 70 times the weight of today's handsets.

The first handheld phone from Panasonic, the TZ-802B, was a brick-like model launched in 1987. It debuted its first digital model for NTT's PDC (Personal Digital Communications) network, a Japan-developed second generation standard that failed to take off overseas, in 1991, and by June 1997 had hit shipments of 10 million phones.

More recently Panasonic was one of the first phone makers to produce a handset for NTT DoCoMo's 3G service, which was the first commercial 3G service to launch when it started in 2001. At about the same time Panasonic hit shipments of 50 million handsets.

Today's phones from the company, like those from other manufacturers, are far removed from the handsets of even five years ago. They are packed with digital entertainment functions the most recent addition being mobile digital TV. The service is available free over-the-air and has proved very popular with users.

Its popularity has led Panasonic to put some of the know-how from its flat-panel TV business into its latest phones. The newest models carry the same Viera brand-name as its big-screen TVs.

Kroenke buys ITV stake in Arsenal Broadband

U.S. sports tycoon Stan Kroenke has strengthened his links with English soccer club Arsenal by buying a 50 percent stake in Arsenal Broadband Ltd from British broadcaster ITV for 22.7 million pounds ($45.4 million).

Kroenke, co-owner of the St Louis Rams NFL team, has a 12 percent stake in Arsenal, giving him a voice in the future of the north London club in which Russian billionaire Alisher Usmanov and a partner own around 24 percent.

Arsenal's board own over 40 percent of the club.

"We have held constructive and fruitful discussions with Stan Kroenke over the past year and are excited by the prospect of further developing our mutual commercial projects with KSE (Kroenke Sports Entertainment)," Arsenal Managing Director Keith Edelman said in a statement.

ITV sold its 9.99 percent stake in Arsenal to Kroenke last April and said at that time that it had entered into a conditional arrangement to sell its 50 percent stake in Arsenal Broadband Ltd to him.

ITV said it had received a total of 65 million pounds from Kroenke for its interests in Arsenal and that it had raised over 620 million pounds by selling non-core assets since its creation from the merger of Granada and Carlton in 2004.

Kroenke said in October that his stake in Arsenal was a long-term investment.

Yahoo details plans for new online ad sales system


Yahoo Inc on Sunday detailed plans for its forthcoming Web advertising management system that gives its ad sales-partners access to online ad space both on Yahoo and other major sites.

The widely anticipated system, known as AMP!, aims to simplify the process of buying and selling online ads for advertisers, ad agencies, fast-growing ad trading networks and Web site publishers.

The ad management system seeks to capitalize on Yahoo's strength as a Web site publisher that reaches 500 million Web users monthly and recent efforts to sell ads off of Yahoo through major partnerships or specialized ad-sales networks.

The planned advertising system, formerly code-named Apex, is the lynchpin of the company's strategy to reach outside its own base of users and increase its position as the "must buy" location for online advertisers.

While the strategy remains in its early stages, AMP! is one of the products which Yahoo management believes will help propel the Web pioneer's next wave of growth. It is also one factor behind Yahoo's reluctance to accept Microsoft Corp's unsolicited takeover bid currently valued at $42.4 billion, which executives believe undervalues the company's assets.

"This is really about creating a massively networked advertising ecosystem," Yahoo advertising executive Mike Walrath said in an interview. Walrath founded Right Media, an ad sales exchange, in 2003 and sold it to Yahoo last year.

AMP! will be introduced in stages starting in the third quarter of this year, Yahoo said. It aims to give individual sites the capacity to sell ads across the Web, replacing single-site systems that still use e-mail and even faxes.

The move also is a response to major competitors Google Inc and Microsoft Corp, which have each acquired major competitors in the market for sales of online display ads used by corporate brand marketers. Google closed its $3.4 billion acquisition of ad sales management firm DoubleClick last month. Microsoft paid $6 billion for aQuantive last May.

AMP! is a suite of tools that offers precise geographic, demographic, and interest-based targeting across a vast network of Yahoo sites and ad sales deals Yahoo has struck with more than 600 newspapers, Comcast and eBay Inc

It also includes niche Web sites such as WebMD, Forbes, the major ad networks, and thousands of smaller sites on the Web.

In its initial stages, AMP! is designed to expand the reach of dedicated sales forces at newspapers or sites such as WebMD to allow them to reach many times larger audiences outside of their own sites, where they can cross-sell their advertising.

Yahoo promises to 'amp' up ad platform

Yahoo Inc. believes it's poised to revolutionize online advertising after years of being outmaneuvered by rival Google Inc.

But the slumping Internet pioneer might not get the chance to show off the latest improvements to its online advertising platform unless it can convince increasingly impatient investors that the new approach will produce a bigger payoff than Microsoft Corp.'s unsolicited offer to buy the Sunnyvale-based company for more than $40 billion.

Hoping to gain wiggle room, Yahoo is releasing more details about its effort to become a one-stop shop for selling and distributing online display ads — the Internet's equivalent of billboards.

The upgrade, called "Amp," won't be available until some time this summer, and then only on a limited basis among more than 600 newspaper publishers trying recover some of the revenue that the Internet has siphoned from their print editions.

Nevertheless, Yahoo will begin promoting Amp on Monday with an online video demonstration of a system that the Sunnyvale-based company promises will make it easier for advertisers to aim their messages at specific demographic groups across scores of Web sites.

"This is a revolutionary approach that will allow marketers and publishers to deliver a more compelling experience for consumers," said Hilary Schneider, Yahoo's executive vice president of global partner solutions.

Those remarks echo similar boasts that Yahoo's top two executives, Jerry Yang and Sue Decker, made at an online advertising conference in late February. At that time, the new system was still operating under the code name "Apex," short hand for Advertiser Publisher Exchange.

Amp will rely heavily on data that Yahoo collects about people's preferences at its own Web site as well as other online destinations. The practice, known as "behavioral targeting," has raised privacy concerns, but Yahoo — like rivals using similar tracking technology — believes consumers will appreciate seeing more ads tailored to their individual interests.

Yahoo's new platform will be competing against similar technology recently acquired by Google and Microsoft. Google bought DoubleClick Inc. for $3.2 billion primarily so it would have a better vehicle for selling display ads. The same objective drove Microsoft's $6 billion purchase of aQuantive.

Amp didn't cost Yahoo nearly as much. Besides relying on engineering developed by its own engineers, Amp draws on technology that Yahoo picked up by buying online ad service Right Media and Blue Lithium last year for a total of $781 million.

Selling advertisers on Amp may prove to be easier than convincing Yahoo's shareholders that the new platform is a better bet than selling to Microsoft, whose unsolicited takeover offer was initially valued at $44.6 billion, or $31 per share.

Yahoo maintains its franchise is worth a lot more, partly because of promising new advertising ideas like Amp.

But investors have reason to doubt Yahoo's judgment after two years of disappointing results.

"They have a little bit of a credibility problem right now," Jupiter Research analyst David Card said.

In a sign of the skepticism dogging Yahoo, Wall Street hasn't embraced the bullish optimistic outlook that the company released last month to illustrate why its board of directors rebuffed Microsoft's bid.

Yahoo projected its 2009 revenue, after subtracting ad commission, will total $7.1 billion, up 25 percent from this year. The company expects its 2010 revenue to climb another 25 percent to $8.8 billion.

Analysts have much lower expectations, with their average revenue estimates standing at $6.4 billion for 2009 and $7.4 billion for 2010.

Amp isn't the first advertising upgrade that Yahoo has touted as a financial catalyst. Last year, the company rolled out a much ballyhooed formula called "Panama" that was designed to do a better job of displaying text-based ads alongside online search results.

Although most advertisers applauded Panama as an improvement over the previous system, it wasn't enough to lift Yahoo out of the financial doldrums that have depressed its profits since 2005. The downturn opened the door for Microsoft's bid.

Just how much longer Yahoo can fend off Microsoft remains uncertain.

On Saturday, Microsoft said that if a deal was not reached by April 26, it would launch a hostile takeover at a less attractive price. If Microsoft pursues that option, Yahoo's annual shareholders meeting will be the most likely forum for the showdown. Yahoo must hold the meeting by July 12, right around the time Amp is supposed to debut.

Ancient stone tools found on Australia mine site


A large cache of stone tools estimated to be up to 35,000 years old has been discovered on the site of one of Australia's largest iron ore mines, sparking calls on Monday for the site's preservation.

Archaeologists uncovered the tools on the site of the A$1 billion ($920 million) Hope Downs iron ore mine, about 310 kilometres (192 miles) south of Port Hedland, in western Australia's ore-rich Pilbara region.

"We have always known this is an important part of our history, that our ancestors lived here," Slim Parker, a senior elder of the local Martidja Banyjima people, told Australia's Fairfax newspapers.

"Our stories and songs tells us this. It is a good feeling to know archaeologists have proved what we say is true. It makes us feel strong. Now we want this place preserved. It is part of our heritage and our culture," Parker said.

Archaeologist consultant Neale Draper said the Hope Downs site could prove to be one of Australia's most significant historical finds, and could yield more material up to 40,000 years old.

The stone tools, mostly makeshift blades and cutting implements, were found in a rock overhang. Carbon dating tests indicated some were much older than charcoal remnants from ancient campfires.

"The oldest-dated stone artifacts are a core, and associated flakes that have a radiocarbon age estimate of 35,000 years," U.S. archaeologist W. Boone Law said, referring to an implement resembling a stone spike.

He said the site was of international historical significance.

The Hope Downs mine, jointly run by Rio Tinto (RIO.AX>, the world's second-biggest ore miner, and Hancock Prospecting, is expected to have a yearly capacity of 30 million metric tons when a two-stage project is completed. Production from stage one began last year.

DISCUSSIONS ONGOING

Discussions are underway between the mine companies and the indigenous owners of the land, who wanted sensitive areas where Aborigines had lived for more than 1,000 generations protected from mining.

"We've been talking to them about altering the mine plan and I think have reached a tentative understanding to do that. It's off to the side of an expansion to the Hope Downs mine," a Rio Tinto spokesman told Reuters.

"In terms of any impact on the mine, it's rather hypothetical at this stage. We've reached a tentative understanding. There is not an actual mine there yet."

He said the company alerted indigenous people to the site after heritage surveys identified the overhang as of possible interest.

"We stopped work a couple of months ago and called in the archaeologists," the spokesman said.

Aboriginal culture and mining occasionally clash in Australia and the previous conservative government stalled for months before allowing construction of a A$12 billion LNG plant near 30,000-year-old Aboriginal rock carvings on the Burrup Peninsula, also in Western Australia.

Former prime minister Bob Hawke halted construction of a uranium mine at Coronation Hill in 1991 because of its association with a mythical creation beast called the Bula, sacred to the Jawoyn people in the outback Northern Territory.

Investigation of the Hope Downs site could also help in the understanding of climate change and how Aborigines had coped with an evolving climate, scientists said.